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Rava Dosa — Instant Semolina Crepe
🫓 South Indian · Level 1

Rava Dosa

The instant dosa — semolina, rice flour and spices mixed with water. No fermentation. Ready in 30 minutes. Crispier than regular dosa and faster than anything else on the South Indian menu.

Prep25 min
Cook20 min
Serves4
Level1 — Beginner
🥬 Vegetarian🌱 Vegan🟡 Jain

Why rava dosa is crispier than fermented dosa

Rava dosa achieves its extreme crispness through a different mechanism than fermented dosa. Semolina (rava) has coarser, harder starch granules than rice flour — when these hit the hot tawa in a thin layer, they gelatinise unevenly, producing a lacework of thin crisp sheets rather than a uniform crepe. The batter is also much more liquid than regular dosa batter — it is almost poured rather than spread, and it self-levels into the characteristic irregular holes and crisp lattice that defines rava dosa.

⚠️Common mistakes to avoid
  • Not resting the batter 20 minutes — The semolina absorbs water during the rest period. Without rest, the granules absorb water from the tawa batter and the dosa becomes thick and uneven.
  • Batter too thick — Rava dosa batter must be very watery — almost the consistency of thin buttermilk. It is poured, not spread.
  • Spreading like regular dosa — Rava dosa is poured in a circular motion from height, not spread with the back of a ladle.
  • Low heat — Rava dosa requires high heat throughout for the crisp texture.
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Ingredients

Rava Dosa — Instant Semolina Crepe
4 servings
Rava Dosa Batter
  • ½ cupfine semolina (rava/sooji)
  • ½ cuprice flour
  • 2 tbspplain flour (maida)— for binding
  • 1green chilli, finely chopped
  • 1 tspginger, grated
  • 10curry leaves, finely chopped
  • 1 tbspcoriander, finely chopped
  • ½ tspcumin seeds
  • ½ tspblack pepper, coarsely crushed
  • Saltto taste
  • 2.5 cupswater— batter must be very thin
  • Oilfor cooking
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How to make it — step by step

Step 1
Mix batter and rest 20 minutes
⏱ 20 min rest⚡ Rest is non-negotiable

Combine semolina, rice flour, plain flour, all aromatics and salt. Add water gradually, whisking until very thin and pourable — thinner than you think. Rest 20 minutes. Stir well before use — the semolina will have settled.

🔬The Science

During the 20-minute rest, semolina granules absorb water and swell slightly — their hard outer shell softens just enough to allow starch gelatinisation on the hot tawa. Without rest, dry semolina granules hit the tawa and absorb water too slowly, creating thick, pasty patches instead of a crisp lacework. The plain flour provides gluten that holds the lattice structure together — without it, the holes in the rava dosa become too large and the crepe falls apart.

Step 2
Pour — do not spread
⏱ 3 min per dosa🔥 High throughout⚡ Pour from height, circular

Heat tawa on high until very hot. Lightly oil. Hold ladle 15–20cm above tawa. Pour batter in a fast circular motion from the outside in — the batter will flow and create holes naturally. Do not spread with the ladle back. Drizzle oil around edges.

🔬The Science

Pouring from height creates a thinner stream that spreads by momentum rather than by the pushing action of spreading. The height creates enough kinetic energy for the thin batter to reach the outer edges before gelatinisation begins. The irregular holes form where the batter stream missed during pouring — these thin areas cook rapidly to a glass-like crispness while the thicker areas remain slightly softer, creating the characteristic texture contrast of rava dosa.

Step 3
Cook until golden and crisp — do not flip
⏱ 3 min🔥 High

Cook on high heat until the entire surface is golden, dry and crisp — the dosa lifts easily from the tawa. This takes longer than regular dosa — about 3 minutes. Remove without flipping.

🔬The Science

The longer cooking time for rava dosa is because the semolina granules require sustained heat to fully gelatinise and dehydrate. The Maillard browning on the contact side produces the deep golden colour — the irregular surface means different areas brown at different rates, producing the characteristic mottled golden-brown pattern. Not flipping preserves the crisp top surface that has dried from heat radiation.

Rava Dosa — Instant Semolina Crepe — answered
Do I need to ferment rava dosa batter?
No — this is the main advantage of rava dosa. The batter is ready in 25 minutes (including rest). The crispness comes from the semolina structure, not fermentation.
Can I add onion to rava dosa?
Yes — finely chopped onion is a popular addition (onion rava dosa). Add to the batter or scatter on the tawa just before pouring. The onion caramelises in the holes and adds sweetness.
Why is my rava dosa soft instead of crispy?
Batter too thick, heat too low, or flipping. The batter must be very thin, the heat must be high throughout, and it should never be flipped.
Can I make the batter ahead?
Yes — up to 4 hours ahead. The semolina absorbs more water over time, so you may need to add a little water before use to restore the correct thin consistency. Stir well before each dosa.
What do I serve with rava dosa?
Coconut chutney is essential. Sambhar works well. The crisp, neutral flavour of rava dosa is particularly good with chutneys — it does not overpower them the way the tangier fermented dosa can.